This series of educational handouts explores the historical, ethical, and clinical foundations of self-care. Moving beyond wellness trends, these resources frame well-being as a professional competency essential for ethical practice and high-quality patient care. They provide a deep dive into the specific psychological risks of mental health work, such as secondary trauma and disenfranchised grief, and offer a multidimensional framework for sustaining a long-term career in the field.
Self-Care and Sustainability in Mental Health Work
This resource establishes self-care as a foundational ethical responsibility rather than a luxury, tracing its roots from social justice movements to modern clinical practice. It defines a multidimensional approach to well-being, spanning physical, emotional, relational, and professional domains, to help clinicians move from normalizing chronic stress toward proactive, intentional resilience.
Self-Care as a Bridge: Maintaining Balance in Mental Health Work
This document introduces the concept of self-care as a bridge that connects daily workplace stressors to long-term emotional resilience. It explores the mechanics of recovery, emphasizing the shift from emotional depletion to regulation and highlighting the critical role of psychological detachment and intentional transitions between work and home.
Sustaining the Work: Burnout, Compassion Fatigue, and Grief
This clinical primer differentiates between the three primary occupational hazards of mental health work: the gradual exhaustion of burnout, the sudden onset of compassion fatigue, and the often-unrecognized impact of disenfranchised grief. It identifies specific workplace and personal risk factors while providing tailored interventions to help professionals manage the unique emotional heaviness of high-acuity care.